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The collective name for the municipalities of North Hudson has been used for various agencies, institutions, and organizations. Area authorities that serve its transportation, health, and recreational needs include the North Hudson County Railway (c. 1865), [15] North Hudson Hospital (c. 1900), [16] and North Hudson Park (c.1908) and the Hoboken-North Hudson YMCA (c. 1929).
Sewer districts in Nassau County, on Long Island, in New York, United States. Pages in category "Sewer districts in Nassau County, New York" The following 4 pages are in this category, out of 4 total.
In recent years, the Nassau County Sewage District assumed control of the City of Glen Cove's sanitary sewer system. [2] Nassau County's sanitary sewer system handles roughly 85% of sewage in Nassau County. The other 15% is handled by smaller, independent water pollution control districts (i.e.: the Port Washington Water Pollution Control ...
The Passaic Valley Sewerage Commission (PVSC) is a regional wastewater public utility located in Newark, New Jersey. Established in 1902, PVSC provides sewage treatment services to 1.5 million people, consisting of 48 municipalities, in Bergen , Essex , Hudson , Union and Passaic Counties.
The Northeast Ohio Sewer District serves over a million people in the Cleveland area, and the boundaries of service go as far south as Brecksville and Hudson. It handles sewage, wastewater ...
A facility disguised as townhouses, built in 2009 by North Hudson Sewerage Authority [22] H1 Screening and Wet Weather Pump Station 99 Observer Highway Hoboken, New Jersey: United States Combined sewer overflow screening and flood pumping station
The county health department had been notified by the county Department of Environmental Facilities that partially treated sewage was being released into the Hudson River at 100 Croton River Road ...
The Great Neck Water Pollution Control District was established in 1914. [2] [3] A major upgrade project took place in 1990, during which the district's sewage treatment capacity was increased to 3.8 million gallons per day.